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Title: Microbiology: A Systems Approach, 2nd ed.


1
Microbiology A Systems Approach, 2nd ed.
  • Chapter 12 Drugs, Microbes, Host The Elements
    of Chemotherapy

2
12.1 Principles of Antimicrobial Therapy
  • Goal of antimicrobial chemotherapy administer a
    drug to an infected person, which destroys the
    infective agent without harming the hosts cells
  • Rather difficult to achieve this goal
  • Chemotherapeutic agents described with regard to
    their origin, range of effectiveness, and whether
    they are naturally produced or chemically
    synthesized

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The Origins of Antimicrobial Drugs
  • Antibioitics are common metabolic products of
    aerobic bacteria and fungi
  • Bacteria Streptomyces and Bacillus
  • Molds Penicillium and Cephalosporium
  • Chemists have created new drugs by altering the
    structure of naturally occurring antibiotics
  • Also Searching for metabolic compounds with
    antimicrobial effects in species other than
    bacteria and fungi

6
12.2 Interactions Between Drug and Microbe
  • Goal of antimicrobial drugs
  • Disrupt the cell processes or structures of
    bacteria, fungi, and protozoa
  • Or inhibit virus replication
  • Most interfere with the function of enzymes
    required to synthesize or assemble macromolecules
    or destroy structures already formed in the cell
  • Drugs should be selectively toxic- they kill or
    inhibit microbial cells without damaging host
    tissues

7
Mechanisms of Drug Action
  • Inhibition of cell wall synthesis
  • Inhibition of nucleic acid structure and function
  • Inhibition of protein synthesis
  • Interference with cell membrane structure or
    function
  • Inhibition of folic acid synthesis

8
Figure 12.1
9
Antimicrobial Drugs that Affect the Bacterial
Cell Wall
  • Active cells must constantly synthesize new
    peptidoglycan and transport it to the proper
    place in the cell envelope
  • Penicillins and cephalosporins react with one or
    more of the enzymes required to complete this
    process
  • Bactericidal antibiotics

10
Figure 12.2
11
Figure 12.3
12
Antimicrobial Drugs that Affect Nucleic Acid
Synthesis
  • Block synthesis of nucleotides
  • Inhibit replication
  • Stop transcription
  • Inhibit DNA synthesis

13
Antimicrobial Drugs that Block Protein Synthesis
  • Inhibit translation by reacting with the
    ribosome-mRNA complex
  • Prokaryotic ribosomes are different from
    eukaryotic ribosomes- selective

14
Figure 12.4
15
Antimicrobial Drugs that Disrupt Cell Membrane
Function
  • Damaged membrane invariably results in death from
    disruption in metabolism or lysis
  • Specificity for particular microbial groups based
    on differences in the types of lipids in their
    cell membranes

16
Antimicrobial Drugs that Inhibit Folic Acid
Synthesis
  • Sulfonamides and trimethoprim- competitive
    inhibition
  • Supplied to cells in high concentrations to make
    sure enzyme is constantly occupied with the
    metabolic analog rather than the true substrate

17
Figure 12.5
18
12.3 Survey of Major Antimicrobial Drug Groups
  • About 260 different antimicrobial drugs
  • Classified in 20 drug families
  • Largest number of antimicrobial drugs are for
    bacterial infections

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Antibacterial Drugs Targeting the Cell Wall
  • Penicillin group
  • Most end in the suffix cillin
  • Can obtain natural penicillin through microbial
    fermentation
  • All consist of three parts a thiazolidine ring,
    a beta-lactam ring, and a variable side chain

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Figure 12.6
22
Subgroups and Uses of Penicillins
23
The Cephalosporin Group of Drugs
  • Newer group
  • Currently account for a majority of all
    antibiotics administered

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Figure 12.7
25
Subgroups and Uses of Cephalosporins
  • Broad-spectrum
  • Resistant to mot penicillinases
  • Cause fewer allergic reactions than penicillins
  • Four generations of cephalosporins exist based on
    their antibacterial activity

26
Other Beta-Lactam Antibiotics
  • Imipenem
  • Aztreonam

27
Other Drugs Targeting the Cell Wall
  • Bacitracin
  • Isoniazid
  • Vancomycin
  • Fosfomycin trimethamine

28
Antibacterial Drugs Targeting Protein Synthesis
  • Aminoglycoside Drugs
  • Products of various species of soil actinomycetes
    in the genera Streptomyces and Micromonospora
  • Relatively broad spectrum because they inhibit
    protein synthesis
  • Subgroups and uses
  • Aerobic gram-negative rods and certain
    gram-positive bacteria
  • Streptomycin Bubonic plague and tularemia and
    good antituberculosis agent
  • Gentamicin Less toxic and used for
    gram-negative rods

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Figure 12.9
31
Tetracycline Antibiotics
  • Bind to ribosomes and block protein synthesis
  • Broad-spectrum
  • Subgroups and uses
  • Gram positive and gram-negative rods and cocci
  • Aerobic and anerobic bacteria
  • Mycoplasmas, rickettsias, and spirochetes
  • Doxycycline and minocycline for sexually
    transmitted diseases, Rocky Mountain spotted
    fever, Lyme disease, typhus, Mycoplasma
    pneumonia, cholera, leptospirosis, acne, even
    some protozoan

32
Chloramphenicol
  • Broad-spectrum
  • Unique nitrobenzene structure
  • Blocks peptide bond formation and protein
    synthesis
  • Entirely synthesized through chemical processes
  • Very toxic to human cells so its uses are
    restricted

33
Erythromycin and Clindamycin
  • Erythromycin
  • Large lactone rinig with sugars attached
  • Relatively broad-spectrum
  • Fairly low toxicity
  • Blocks protein synthesis by attaching to the
    ribosome
  • Mycoplasma pneumonia, legionellosis, Chlamydia
    infections, pertussis, diphtheria
  • Clindamycin
  • Broad-spectrum
  • Derived from lincomycin
  • Causes adverse reactions in the gastrointestinal
    tract, so applications are limited

34
Figure 12.10
35
Synercid and Oxazolidones
  • Synercid
  • Combined antibiotic from the streptogramin group
  • Effective against Staphylococcus and Enterococus
    species and against resistant strains of
    Streptococcus
  • Binds to sites on the 50S ribosome, inhibiting
    translation
  • Oxazolidones
  • Inhibit the initiation of protein synthesis
  • Not found in nature
  • Hoping that drug resistance among bacteria will
    be slow to develop
  • Used to treat infections caused by two of the
    most difficult clinical pathogens
    methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
    (MRSA) and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus
    (VRE)

36
Antibacterial Drugs Targeting Folic Acid Synthesis
  • Sulfonamides, Trimethoprim, and Sulfones
  • Sulfonamides
  • Sulfa drugs
  • Very first modern antimicrobial drug
  • Synthetic
  • Shigellosis, acute urinary tract infections,
    certain protozoan infections
  • Trimethoprim
  • Inhibits the enzymatic step immediately following
    the step inhibited by solfonamides in the
    synthesis of folic acid
  • Often given in combination with sulfamethoxazole
  • One of the primary treatments for Pneumocystis
    (carinii) jiroveci pneumonia (PCP) in AIDS
    patients
  • Sulfones
  • Chemically related to sulfonamides
  • Lack their broad-spectrum effects
  • Key drugs in treating Hansens disease (leprosy)

37
Figure 12.11
38
Antibacterial Drugs Targeting DNA or RNA
  • Fluoroquinolones
  • High potency
  • Broad spectrum
  • Inhibit a wide variety of gram-positive and
    gram-negative bacterial species even in minimal
    concentrations

39
Norfloxacin and Ciprofloxacin
  • Urinary tract infections, STDs, gastrointestinal
    infections, osteomyelitis, respiratory
    infections, soft tissue infections

40
Sparfloxacin and Levofloxacin
  • Newer drugs
  • Pneumonia, bronchitis sinusitis

41
Rifampin
  • Product of the genus Streptomyces
  • Limited in spectrum
  • Mainly for infections by several gram-positive
    rods and cocci and a few gram-negative bacteria
  • Mycobacterial infections such as tuberculosis and
    leprosy
  • Usually given in combination with other drugs

42
Antibacterial Drugs Targeting Cell Membranes
  • Polymyxins narrow-spectrum peptide antibiotics
  • From Bacillus polymyxa
  • Limited by their toxicity to the kidney
  • B and E can be used to treat drug-resistant
    Pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • Daptomycin
  • Lipopeptide made by Streptomyces
  • Most active against gram-positive bacteria

43
Agents to Treat Fungal Infections
  • Fungal cells are eukaryotic, so present special
    problems
  • Majority of chemotherapeutic drugs are designed
    to act on bacteria and are ineffective for fungal
    infections
  • Similarities between fungal and human cells-
    toxicity to humans
  • Four main groups
  • Macrolide polyene antibiotics, Griseofulvin,
    Synthetic azoles, Flucystosine

44
Macrolide Polyene Antibiotics
  • Bind to fungal membranes and cause loss of
    selective permeability
  • Specific for fungal membranes because fungal
    membranes contain ergosterol
  • Examples amphotericin B and nystatin
  • Mimics lipids in some cell membranes

45
Griseofulvin
  • Especially active in certain dermatophyte
    infections such as athletes foot
  • Requires several months and is relatively
    nephrotoxic, so only given for most stubborn cases

46
Synthetic Azoles
  • Broad-spectrum antifungal agents
  • Ketoconazole, fluconazole, clotrimazole, and
    miconazole
  • Ketoconazole orally and topically for cutaneous
    mycoses, vaginal and oral candidiasis, and some
    systemic mycoses
  • Fluconazole used in selected patients for
    AIDS-related mycoses
  • Clotrimazole and miconazole mainly topical
    ointments for infections in the skin, mouth, and
    vagina

47
Flucystosine
  • Analog of the nucleotide cytosine
  • Can be used to treat certain cutaneous mycoses
  • Usually combined with amphotericin B for systemic
    mycoses

48
Figure 12.12
49
Antiparasitic Chemotherapy
  • Antimalarial Drugs Quinine and Its Relatives
  • Quinine extracted from the bark of the cinchona
    tree
  • Replaced by synthesized quinolines (chloroquine
    and primaquine) which have less toxicity to
    humans
  • Chemotherapy for Other Protozoan Infections
  • Metronidazole (Flagyl)
  • Amoebicide
  • Treating mild and severe intestinal infections by
    Entamoeba histolytica
  • Orally can also apply to infections by Giardia
    lamblia and Trichomonas vaginalis
  • Quinicrine, sulfonamides, tetracyclines

50
Antihelminthic Drug Therapy
  • Flukes, tapeworms, and roundworms have greater
    similarities to human physiology
  • Using drugs to block their reproduction is
    usually not successful in eradicating adult worms
  • Most effective drugs immobilize, disintegrate, or
    inhibit the metabolism of all stages of the life
    cycle

51
Mebendazole and Thiabendazole
  • Broad-spectrum
  • Used in several roundworm intestinal infestations
  • Inhibit the function of microtubules of worms,
    eggs, and larvae

52
Pyrantel and Piperazine Praziquantel Ivermectin
  • Pyrantel and piperazine
  • Paralyze the muscles of intestinal roundworms
  • Praziquantel
  • Tapeworm and fluke infections
  • Ivermectin
  • Veterinary drug now used for strongyloidiasis and
    oncocercosis in humans

53
Antiviral Chemotherapeutic Agents
  • Selective toxicity is almost impossible to
    achieve because a single metabolic system is
    responsible for the well-being of both virus and
    host
  • Several antiviral drugs have been developed that
    target specific points in the infectious cycle of
    viruses
  • Three major modes of action
  • Barring penetration of the virus into the host
    cell
  • Blocking the transcription and translation of
    viral molecules
  • Preventing the maturation of viral particles

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Interferon (IFN) An Alternative to Artificial
Drugs
  • Glycoprotein produced by fibroblasts and
    leukocytes in response to various immune stimuli
  • Produced by recombinant DNA technologies
  • Known therapeutic benefits
  • Reducing the time of healing and some of the
    complications in certain infections
  • Preventing or reducing some symptoms of cold and
    papillomaviruses
  • Slowing the progress of certain cancers
  • Treating a rare cancer called hairy-cell
    leukemia, hepatitis C, genital warts, and
    Kaposis sarcoma in AIDS patients
  • Often results in serious side effects

56
Interactions Between Microbes and Drugs The
Acquisition of Drug Resistance
  • Drug resistance an adaptive response in which
    microorganisms begin to tolerate an amount of
    drug that would ordinarily be inhibitory
  • Can be intrinsic or acquired
  • Microbes become newly resistant to a drug after
  • Spontaneous mutations in critical chromosomal
    genes
  • Acquisition of entire new genes or sets of genes
    via transfer from another species (plasmids
    called resistance (R) factors)
  • Specific Mechanisms of Drug Resistance

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Figure 12.13
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Natural Selection and Drug Resistance
Figure 12.14
59
New Approaches to Antimicrobial Therapy
  • Often researchers try to find new targets in the
    bacterial cell and custom-design drugs that aim
    for them
  • Targeting iron-scavenging capabilities of
    bacteria
  • Targeting a genetic control mechanism in bacteria
    referred to as riboswitches
  • Probiotics and prebiotics
  • Lantibiotics

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12.4 Interaction Between Drug and Host
61
Toxicity to Organs
  • Liver, kidneys, gastrointestinal tract,
    cardiovascular system and blood-forming tissue,
    nervous system, respiratory tract, skin, bones,
    and teeth

62
Figure 12.15
63
Allergic Responses to Drugs
  • Allergy heightened sensitivity
  • The drug acts as an antigen and stimulates an
    allergic response
  • Reactions such as skin rash, respiratory
    inflammation, and rarely anaphylaxis

64
Suppression and Alteration of the Microbiota by
Antimicrobials
  • Biota normal colonists or residents of healthy
    body surfaces
  • Usually harmless or beneficial bacteria
  • Small number can be pathogens
  • If a broad-spectrum antimicrobial is used, it
    will destroy both infectious agents but also some
    beneficial species

65
Superinfection
  • When beneficial species are destroyed, microbes
    that were once kept in small numbers can begin to
    overgrow and cause disease- a superinfection
  • Using a broad-spectrum cephalosporin for a
    urinary tract infection destroys lactobacilli in
    the vagina without the lactobacilli Candida
    albicans can proliferate and cause a yeast
    infection
  • Oral therapy with tetracyclines, clindamycin, and
    broad-spectrum penicillins and cephalosporins is
    associated with antibiotic-associated colitis

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Figure 12.16
67
12.5 Considerations in Selecting an
Antimicrobial Drug
  • Three factors must be known
  • The nature of the microorganism causing the
    infection
  • The degree of the microorganisms susceptibility
    to various drugs
  • The overall medical condition of the patient
  • Identifying the Agent
  • Direct examination of body fluids, sputum, or
    stool is a rapid initial method
  • The choice of drug will be based on experience
    with drugs that are known to be effective against
    the microbe the informed best guess
  • Testing for the Drug Susceptibility of
    Microorganisms

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Figure 12.17
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Figure 12.18
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Figure 12.19
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The MIC and Therapeutic Index
  • MIC- minimum inhibitory concentration the
    smallest concentration (highest dilution) of drug
    that visibly inhibits growth
  • Once therapy has begun, it is important to
    observe the patients clinical response

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If Antimicrobial Treatment Fails
  • If antimicrobial treatment fails, the failure is
    due to
  • The inability of the drug to diffuse into that
    body compartment
  • A few resistant cells in the culture that did not
    appear in the sensitivity test
  • An infection caused by more than one pathogen,
    some of which are resistant to the drug

74
Best Choice of Drug
  • Best to choose the drug with high selective
    toxicity for the infectious agent and low human
    toxicity
  • Therapeutic index (TI) the ratio of the dose of
    the drug that is toxic to humans as compared to
    its minimum effective dose
  • The smaller the ratio, the greater the potential
    for toxic drug reactions
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